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Hitchhiking Mexican migrants die when train derails

Mon., Aug. 26, 2013

Police agents and rescue workers work Sunday at a site where a train derailed in Tabasco, Mexico. An cargo train known as “The Beast,” carrying at least 250 Central American migrants heading to the U.S. derailed in a remote region of southern Mexico, killing five, authorities said. (Associated Press)

CHONTALPA, Mexico – A notorious cargo train known as “the Beast” and carrying at least 250 Central American hitchhiking migrants derailed in a remote region of southern Mexico on Sunday, killing at least three people and injuring 20, authorities said.

The train company and rescue workers were bringing in two cranes to begin lifting the eight derailed cars overnight, and officials hoped to find more victims under the wreckage.

Late Sunday, federal authorities had lowered the death toll to three but said minutes later that two more had died and put the toll back at the five announced earlier by Tabasco state officials. It said 18 others were injured, two of them near death.

Thousands of migrants ride the roofs of the train cars on their way north each year, braving brutal conditions for a chance to enter the United States.

The Tabasco state government said at least 250 Honduran migrants were on the train heading north from Guatemala. Heavy rains had loosened the earth beneath the tracks and shifted the rails, officials said.

Honduran President Porfirio Lobo set up a call center for families to learn information about their loved ones.

The head of civil protection for Mexico’s Interior Department, Luis Felipe Puente, released a list of 17 Hondurans ranging in ages from 19 to 54 who were taken to two regional hospitals. Six of them were in serious condition, according to the list he published on his official Twitter account. Puente said another Guatemalan was also wounded, and the Central American nation’s foreign ministry said two were injured.

The locomotive and first car did not derail and were used to move victims to the nearest hospital, in the neighboring state of Veracruz. Tabasco state civil protection chief Cesar Burelo Burelo said the accident happened at 3 a.m. in a marsh surrounded by lakes and forest that is out of cellphone range.